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Moč odsotnega: eluzivnost resničnosti v dveh Antigonah

Authors :
Brane Senegačnik
Source :
Primerjalna književnost. 44
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
The Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts / Znanstvenoraziskovalni center Slovenske akademije znanosti in umetnosti (ZRC SAZU), 2021.

Abstract

Sophocles’s Antigone famously never introduces gods on stage (even in the form of prophecy), and yet everything happens through their agency. The authority of the gods is never called into question; their absence, however, makes their will elusive and unclear, which enables Antigone and Creon to interpret it in completely different ways and causes their fatal conflict. When Teiresias reveals that Creon is wrong, it is too late for Antigone, who dies because she remains true to her (correct) understanding of the divine will (law), although unsupported by any, either divine or human, external authority. In Dominik Smole’s Antigone, by contrast, it is the heroine herself who is absent until the very end of the play, when, after her death, the Pageboy takes over her role. Smole’s radical innovation persistently draws the reader’s (audience’s) attention to the background of the dramatic action, to the invisible reality beyond the stage: to the forbidden region outside society where the key questions of historical truth and of the quintessence of human existence arise. There is a striking analogy between the two Antigones, both in terms of dramaturgy and representation of reality: both plays present the ultimate reality (gods in Sophocles, true human identity in Smole) as hidden yet effective. This ultimate reality reveals itself as a dark horizon and keeps the reality of human existence open. In addition to the central theme, the paper discusses a number of questions about the motivation for reinterpreting canonical texts.

Details

ISSN :
25911805 and 03511189
Volume :
44
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Primerjalna književnost
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8099077c4834d5915eedfc8df2f57cb2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3986/pkn.v44.i1.03